We Found the WORST Weather on Earth

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  • Опубліковано 30 вер 2024
  • Thank you to Wren for supporting PBS. www.wren.co/st...
    As viewers of our show and most inhabitants of planet earth probably already know, the weather down here can get pretty crazy. But we got curious and asked: just HOW EXTREME can weather actually get on earth? So we decided to travel the world in search of answers and discovered not only some fascinating answers, but some pretty interesting questions along the way. Like, how do you even measure the most extreme weather anyway? Is it according to precipitation? Or wind? Or temperature? Some combination of these elements? Or something else entirely?
    Well, in this episode of Weathered, we dig into all of these questions. And we actually found a place that many experts agree is, indeed, home to the world’s worst weather. And it’s not where we expected at all.
    Weathered is a show hosted by weather expert Maiya May and produced by Balance Media that helps explain the most common natural disasters, what causes them, how they’re changing, and what we can do to prepare.
    This episode of Weathered is licensed exclusively to UA-cam.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 332

  • @stacylitwin1466
    @stacylitwin1466 11 місяців тому +249

    The maps that zoom in and show elevation/topography while still showing you the actual landscape are absolutely * chef's kiss * incredible, they illustrate the point so well and help me understand WHY these events happen so much more

    • @OtterPup_
      @OtterPup_ 11 місяців тому +3

      It’s Google Earth lol

    • @jeffmcdonald101
      @jeffmcdonald101 11 місяців тому

      @@OtterPup_ Mapbox actually smart a$$.

    • @Niaaal
      @Niaaal 10 місяців тому

      ​@@OtterPup_I like turtles

  • @ryanb398
    @ryanb398 11 місяців тому +231

    Perhaps an even bigger contributor to the Atacama's aridity that went unmentioned is the Humboldt current, which brings very cold antarctic surface waters up along the Chilean and Peruvian coasts to almost the Ecuador border. This is why there are penguins living on offshore islands at Paracas, why those coasts are shrouded in fog for much of the year, and why, despite being at only 15 degrees south latitude, firmly within the tropics, Lima has average annual temperatures similar to Los Angeles (34 degress north), though with much less rain.
    This very cold surface ocean water cools the air above, resulting in much lower water carrying capacity, and thus no ability for this cold moist foggy air to produce any rain.

    • @StuffandThings_
      @StuffandThings_ 11 місяців тому +12

      Additionally, unusually cold water in the subtropical South Atlantic prevents hurricanes from forming there

    • @ashokkumar-se5sl
      @ashokkumar-se5sl 11 місяців тому +2

      200M $ THAT IS LOST TO USA NOT TO ANY OTHER COUNTRY

    • @Tadeoska
      @Tadeoska 11 місяців тому +2

      yes, that makes a high pressure system that is omnipresent on the ocean and in the desert all the year, it only moves a little when there is El Niño.

    • @cleokatra
      @cleokatra 11 місяців тому +9

      ​@@ashokkumar-se5slare you on the wrong video???

    • @patricknelson
      @patricknelson 11 місяців тому +6

      @@cleokatra ashokkumar-se5sl is probably one of those people you see who randomly posts family photos to the actual Google HQ on Google Maps.

  • @8fledermaus8
    @8fledermaus8 11 місяців тому +57

    There are still plants growing in the Atacama, they scoop up moisture from the fog. "Crime pays but botany doesn't" has several vids exploring both the fog deserts at the coast and inland Chile. it's a great watch if you like a sharp tongue, a thicc Chicago accent, pungent seals, sketchy climbs, and weirrrrd ass plants ^^

    • @thathobbitlife
      @thathobbitlife 11 місяців тому

      Hes amazing! Love CPBBD !!

    • @8fledermaus8
      @8fledermaus8 11 місяців тому

      @@thathobbitlife yeah, the most scatter-mouthed botanist that I know of lol, love him too ^^

    • @kellydalstok8900
      @kellydalstok8900 11 місяців тому +1

      Is that the desert where people hung up nets with a gutter underneath on a mountain ridge to collect water from the fog?

    • @8fledermaus8
      @8fledermaus8 11 місяців тому

      @@kellydalstok8900 I didn't know someone did that until I read your comment ^^

    • @caroenee
      @caroenee 11 місяців тому +1

      @@kellydalstok8900 i believe they do that in perú, don't know if they do that also in chile.

  • @stickynorth
    @stickynorth 11 місяців тому +50

    I definitely agree Mt. Washington takes the cake by having all those forces align to make it so devilishly difficult weather wise... And I say this as an Albertan who had to permanently flee my house this year due to wildfires after suffering from both -40c and +40c temps the year before...

    • @johnmcm7690
      @johnmcm7690 11 місяців тому +2

      40 is the record. Recorded very few times in alberta. Dont make it sound like a regular event

  • @boodashaka2841
    @boodashaka2841 11 місяців тому +29

    I'm a Wellingtonian and the wind is very handy for running but not feeling tired. It does the work for you. The gaps between buildings can funnel it to pretty dramatic affect too. However you don't notice it much day-to-day

    • @pluspiping
      @pluspiping 10 місяців тому +3

      What happens when you have to run in the other direction?😋
      (sorry, I couldn't resist)

  • @douglasboyle6544
    @douglasboyle6544 11 місяців тому +42

    I was born and raised in New England and was always regaled with stories about how Mt Washington had "the Worst Weather" and after having been all over the US and learned about other places and even lived a dozen years in Colorado I had wondered how that was possible. I started looking into it and it's been hard to convince me over the years but yeah, they just seem to have the confluence of factors just right and you summed them nicely here. It's really kind of wild, I mean look at the satellite imagery, the top of that mountain is just bare rock at just 6000ft, it gets hammered year round!

  • @noergelstein
    @noergelstein 11 місяців тому +105

    When mentioning hot places I think other places worth mentioning are:
    - Basra, Irak, which has some of the highest summer temperatures for a large city (Death valley may be hotter but it is also basically uninhabited).
    - Bangkok, Thailand, which has one of the highest average wet bulb temperatures (not extremely hot, but an extreme combination of humidity and heat all year round).
    - Dallol in the Danakil Depression, Ethiopia, which is like if you placed Yellowstone into Death Valley. The peak temperatures aren’t as high as in Death Valley, but there is also nothing resembling winter there and the yearly average temperature is an insane 34C/94F.

    • @8fledermaus8
      @8fledermaus8 11 місяців тому +1

      Would love to visit the Danakil depression and see Erte Ale up close, incredible place, it's so far off from anything I have seen in my temperate European climate

    • @petergray2712
      @petergray2712 11 місяців тому +3

      The Danakil Depression is extreme for another reason: it is the only place on this planet where no life exists due to a lethal mix of chemistry and extreme geothermal heat.

    • @Pushing_Pixels
      @Pushing_Pixels 11 місяців тому +5

      I agree that frequent extreme wet bulb events should've been one of the factors mentioned.

    • @ummuser
      @ummuser 11 місяців тому +3

      Bangkok was unreal hot when I was there. Wake up at 8am, go to the closed window, felt like I was in a straight up broiler. Like bruh now I know how Dracula feels during the daytime

    • @RandomDude-dc8dd
      @RandomDude-dc8dd 10 місяців тому

      Kuwait City is also worth mentioning for being very nearly as hot as Death Valley in summer and about as hot as Basra. It is also very humid compared to Basra or Death Valley, resulting in extremely high wet bulb temperatures.

  • @requiemforameme1
    @requiemforameme1 11 місяців тому +15

    9:16 Glad they could get footage of how our grandpas got to school back in the day.

  • @thehighlander9999
    @thehighlander9999 11 місяців тому +15

    Lol, I live in NH and spent most of the video wondering why Mt. Washington wasn’t mentioned when talking about wind speeds.
    Now I’m wondering why I need to keep relearning patience; you got me. 😅

    • @richardnish6469
      @richardnish6469 7 місяців тому

      Probably because of the low Tsunami Danger.

    • @mrbeansification
      @mrbeansification Місяць тому

      They mentioned mt washington, but no mention of Oklahoma's global wind record at 302 MPH (measured by an instrument, not a human for obvious reasons)

  • @dougaltolan3017
    @dougaltolan3017 11 місяців тому +16

    Fun fact:
    Antarctica has only 2 inches of precipitation a year, same as Death Valley.

    • @illuminatiuser-Masoni
      @illuminatiuser-Masoni 5 місяців тому

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  • @WestOfEarth
    @WestOfEarth 11 місяців тому +15

    Fantastic review. Not just a 'worst weather' list like some clicky channels, but also WHY these areas have such extreme weather. I guess that's the PBS touch! In a part 2, if you do a follow up, I'd like to know where the most humid area is on Earth, as in something like the wet bulb temperature...a place that might be deadly to humans because the humidity is so high you can't sweat.

    • @WeatherHappens
      @WeatherHappens 11 місяців тому +1

      I can tell you that some areas near the Persian Gulf have experienced extreme humidity during the summer months. But if you're looking for an overall average high humidity, I'd guess somewhere near a warm body of water near the equator would be on top.

  • @piripi40
    @piripi40 11 місяців тому +11

    Hello from Wellington New Zealand. It’s very still here today. I have lived here for 50 years and I am convinced the weather has changed and it’s not as windy as it used to be! I don’t know if data would back me up.

    • @ajodea1191
      @ajodea1191 11 місяців тому +1

      Wellington represent

  • @robertcoplin2830
    @robertcoplin2830 11 місяців тому +27

    I knew that Mt. Washington had bad weather but it's really bad. -108°? I'd love to visit the place but not in the winter. Thanks for another excellent learning experience.

  • @nikolark366
    @nikolark366 11 місяців тому +16

    Yay! As a New Hampshire resident, I am happy whenever we are mentioned! Mt. Washington really is quite an anomaly and it's always fun to see what temperature it is compared to the rest of the state

    • @JHaven-lg7lj
      @JHaven-lg7lj 10 місяців тому

      Right? Go, Mount Washington!

  • @doggonemess1
    @doggonemess1 11 місяців тому +22

    I saw something once about a region in Siberia that due to a bowl effect, had some of the hottest and coldest temps on Earth, as well as receiving large amounts of precipitation. For the life of me I can't find the source, though.

    • @inari.28
      @inari.28 11 місяців тому +4

      Maybe you're thinking of Verkhoyansk?

    • @doggonemess1
      @doggonemess1 11 місяців тому +2

      @@inari.28 YES. Thanks, you rock!

    • @inari.28
      @inari.28 11 місяців тому

      @@doggonemess1 No worries! :)

  • @purpleicewitch6349
    @purpleicewitch6349 11 місяців тому +18

    Wonder how many of these records are because they happened in areas where weather is observed a lot more. Parts of the world that lack modern meteorological monitoring on a constant basis might experience even more extreme conditions sometimes but we don’t know about it because it goes unrecorded.

    • @robertoaguiar6230
      @robertoaguiar6230 11 місяців тому +4

      Possibly the reason why US has so many 'the most' something places.

    • @BillionairesArentYourFriends
      @BillionairesArentYourFriends 10 місяців тому +2

      I disagree. Unless you mean in the 90s. Maybe in the past, but not now. We mapped the entire Earth via satellites so I don't see the topography being exactly very subjective. Every individual country doesn't need to send their own to provide data to make an accurate representation. For wind/rain/snow, than yes. To a degree (aka more tech than we'd even understand) But not for the surface/landscape. Which is what 20%-30% of this video was about: the topography. That is a necessary ingredient for disaster. Not just the weather itself.
      So let's talk about the weather:
      What countries don't have weather reporting? Even the poorest of countries, the least populated, and the least technologically developed countries ALL have weather stations that report rainfall, wind, and other weather abnormalities just like anywhere else.
      "Even in the poorest countries, you can find microscopic pockets of corrupt individuals living luxuriously."
      And they want their weather too! As do governments.
      Just because the average person cannot see it like we can on TV (since most don't have any) doesn't mean that someone isn't keeping record somewhere.

    • @BillionairesArentYourFriends
      @BillionairesArentYourFriends 10 місяців тому

      TL;DR maybe prior to say ~1975, but not now. People in places of higher power/govement officials want to know if they're going to get rained on as much as anyone else, you can bet they'll invest in the county's tech to do so. Not a single govement/country is free of some type of corruption. But that means we all get weather data. Probably. I don't know. It's just an argument.

  • @Enonymouse_
    @Enonymouse_ 11 місяців тому +10

    Atacama desert isn't just very dry, portions of it are also very high altitude - high enough that you need some sort of respirator and water would boil at very low temperatures.

  • @stevensellers604
    @stevensellers604 11 місяців тому +19

    I agree with the label of the worst weather. Many times we think of the worst weather as the most destructive weather. However, I feel the label of worst to most destructive enters in when one discusses the impact on humans/communities. Love your videos !!!!!

  • @mikebauer6917
    @mikebauer6917 11 місяців тому +6

    Mt Washington is along the storm track off the Great Lakes and the one along the eastern seaboard/gulf stream. It’s likewise near where the jet stream is located.

  • @eljanrimsa5843
    @eljanrimsa5843 11 місяців тому +8

    The East coast of Greenland has the worst weather outside Antarctica, especially the South East. People have tried to live there in the past, but have given up.

  • @isobarkley
    @isobarkley 11 місяців тому +3

    before wathcing: wettest is either the congo rainforest (average) or south asia during the summer monsoon (record), the windiest is mt. washington (record) or the tibetan plateau? Maybe??? (average), and the driest is antarctica, and the hottest is death valley (for record) or somewhere near the persian gulf (for average). most mesocyclones in central US, most tropical cyclones in the bay of bengal... i think

    • @isobarkley
      @isobarkley 11 місяців тому +1

      Agh, the atacama!! rookie mistake.

    • @isobarkley
      @isobarkley 11 місяців тому +1

      wellington and commonwealth bay, interesting!!! I had no idea

  • @Danfish42
    @Danfish42 11 місяців тому +7

    I backpacked the Presidential Range (which includes Mt Washington) and it was the toughest trail I've ever done...this made me feel a lot better about it kicking my butt!

  • @donaldjones9830
    @donaldjones9830 11 місяців тому +6

    Death Valley is in a graben, just like Verkhoyansk Russia. That is why they are the hottest and coldest places on earth respectively.
    You explained it well, but a graben is a valley between two mountain ranges.

  • @thepuncakian2024
    @thepuncakian2024 11 місяців тому +8

    Another contender I think is Oymyakon in Russia. It has the coldest average temperature in winter, while also being relatively warm and rainy in the spring, having one of the largest temperature variations in the world.

    • @stalledparade
      @stalledparade 11 місяців тому

      I’m fairly certain temperature variation isn’t the only factor.
      А нам нравятся холод 😂

  • @kellbing
    @kellbing 11 місяців тому +42

    The music in this episode was much better than usual. I would prefer if there was none at all, but this is definitely an improvement over previous videos. Thank you.

  • @auricolour7862
    @auricolour7862 11 місяців тому +3

    You mention katabatic winds but don't mention one of my favourite extreme weather locations, the McMurdo Dry Valleys! Antarctic cold, fast katabatic winds, and extremely low humidity (it's possible it hasn't precipitated there in literally millions of years!)

  • @LaNwamNi
    @LaNwamNi 11 місяців тому +3

    I wonder what place has the highest frequency of electrical storms; the most thunder and lightning?

  • @greenwaybikexploring
    @greenwaybikexploring 11 місяців тому +17

    I'm cool with Mt Washington being a geographic location with extreme weather in combination, but I'm now curious about a location that has the hottest, stillest, wettest weather. I say this because Mt Washington has the coldest, windiest, wettest, but that's not quite as terrible a combo (for some) as hot, stagnant humidity.

    • @Iheartseattle1
      @Iheartseattle1 11 місяців тому +5

      There is an episode of weathered about wet bulb temperatures that could answer your question

    • @ecurewitz
      @ecurewitz 11 місяців тому +2

      I’ll take the heat and humidity over that any day

    • @StuffandThings_
      @StuffandThings_ 11 місяців тому +1

      Most equatorial climates will be consistently hot, humid, and not windy, with little variation throughout the year. So, what you'd probably be looking at is any tropical rainforest location within a few degrees of the equator. Somewhere around New Guinea, Indonesia, the Congo rainforest, or the Amazon rainforest would probably be a good bet. Doesn't seem quite so bad to me (though the tropical diseases and mosquitos are another thing...).

    • @eljanrimsa5843
      @eljanrimsa5843 11 місяців тому +1

      Colombia's Chocó region (on the Pacific coast) has an especially nasty combo of some of the highest rainfall in the tropics (which means many times more precipitation than Mt Washington), rugged terrain, and lack of clean drinking water.

    • @paulmryglod4802
      @paulmryglod4802 11 місяців тому +1

      Not year-round, but central Florida in August is brutal for the strong sun, still air- too far from any coastal breeze- and almost daily showers.

  • @PremierCCGuyMMXVI
    @PremierCCGuyMMXVI 10 місяців тому +2

    Great video but Surprised Japan wasn’t on here, in Japan, because of its geography and topography they get the most snow out of anywhere in the world. Many locations see over 400” annually. Mainly because in Winter the Asian continent gets really cold which causes sinking air and high pressure and that pushes air away and moisture away. It’s why Asia is so dry in winter during the dry season of the Monsoon. But because Japan is an island surrounded by water, as the cold arctic Siberian winds blow across the relatively warmer Sea of Japan, it picks up moisture that has been evaporating, because colder air can no longer hold as much water as warmer air, the water precipitates out of the air but because it’s so cold it is snow plus due to the Orographic lift of the Japanese Alps, the moisture is forced up in altitude which drops the pressure even more and the air becomes even colder causing more water to be squeezed out of the atmosphere causing huge amounts of snow.
    What’s interesting, as Global Warming continues to warm the oceans, that acts as more fuel for lake/ocean effect snowstorms so warmer water actually means more evaporation and because warmer air can hold more moisture (even if it remains below freezing) means more snow. NOAA has a great analogy with a Teapot over the ocean generating steam which in turns precipitates when it cools and condenses.

  • @crazywileycoyote
    @crazywileycoyote 11 місяців тому +13

    Love you guys. Forever learner, thanks for another good one

  • @jeffdavis5723
    @jeffdavis5723 11 місяців тому +4

    *I really enjoyed listening to her, extremely helpful and intelligent. Knowledgeable*

  • @Kevwa51
    @Kevwa51 11 місяців тому +30

    Life in the northeast of the US is a good time. 100 degrees in the summer and humid as balls. Sometimes -40 in the winter. Sometimes droughts, sometimes historic flooding. Two years ago we got 48 inches of snow over night in NY and 2 days later it was 70 degrees, and this was around the end of December. Did the same thing in March 4 years before. It’s like a box of chocolates.

    • @jasonreed7522
      @jasonreed7522 11 місяців тому +9

      Atleast it isn't boring. And normally the variance isn't nearly that extreme.
      I still say that the only consistent dangerous weather in NY is ice storms / winter weather which can't kill you if you aren't an idiot. (Every way that winter weather has to kill you is preventable)

    • @laurendamos6651
      @laurendamos6651 11 місяців тому +5

      I feel the same being in southern Ontario, I'm in Toronto by lake Ontario. One bonus is we don't get the Buffalo NY level of snow because we're not in the snow belt (thankfully).

    • @Agent-ie3uv
      @Agent-ie3uv 11 місяців тому +3

      You want sunshine all year round? No, that's boring.

    • @laurendamos6651
      @laurendamos6651 11 місяців тому +1

      @@Agent-ie3uv sunshine every day is perfect, but that doesn't mean that we still can't have a variety of weather. I don't like hot, but a beautiful sunny fall or winter day is great, especially when the sun reflects off the snow and blinds everyone. I would like rain and snow fall to occur at night but that's just me.

    • @Kevwa51
      @Kevwa51 11 місяців тому +2

      I don’t mind NY weather, I wish it was cooler in the summer, or at least less humid, I hate the heat, and sunny days give me anxiety about all the things I should be doing. So I’m fine with snow and rain. Winters my favorite season, but we don’t get consistent snowfall like we did when I was a kid so it sorta sucks now.

  • @Agustin_R
    @Agustin_R 11 місяців тому +5

    In another video you could talk about Punta Arenas in Chile. The city is in Canal de Magallanes (far south) and it’s so windy that wind turbines need to be turned off at some hours. I have read a lot of times that Punta Arenas might be the best piece of land for wind energy. The only problem for the energy development is the amount of birds that migrate between Tierra del Fuego and northern Canadá every year

  • @nobody687
    @nobody687 11 місяців тому +2

    Driest place on earth is in Antarctica. The atacoma gets a heavy fog coming off the pacific ocean , death valkey gets rain. The place in Antarctica is so cold no moisture ever makes it there in any way. Theres no such thing as the west hemisphere . Theres only a northern and southern hemisphere. A spinning sphere has no east or west place on the sphere.

  • @Beryllahawk
    @Beryllahawk 11 місяців тому +4

    Sounds like Mount Washington is the most exciting mountain in the world, never a dull moment if the weather is trying to kill you every day -

  • @jakehood7463
    @jakehood7463 11 місяців тому +2

    Yeah it's 200 degrees on the ground but it's not so bad because it's at least a dry heat.

  • @trncn
    @trncn 11 місяців тому +4

    I’ve hiked over Mt Washington! I remember the observation station having footage of the insane wind speeds. Very cool video, thank you! 🙏👍

  • @mhub3576
    @mhub3576 11 місяців тому +4

    Really enjoyed this piece. Not only informative but entertaining too! Great job by the PBS Terra team, as usual. 😊

  • @DanDunfordRSM
    @DanDunfordRSM 11 місяців тому +6

    Hoping this channel moves on using predominantly metric measurements to the rest of the world can watch, listen and understand

    • @lynnhettrick7588
      @lynnhettrick7588 11 місяців тому

      I’m onboard with that! And I’m in the U.S. I’m trying to be better about learning/knowing/using metric measurements.

  • @ScottTempler
    @ScottTempler 11 місяців тому +1

    Lake Maracaibo in Venezuela is pretty extreme. If you have metal in your body stay way. Highest amount of Lighting strikes in the world

  • @larrywalsh9939
    @larrywalsh9939 11 місяців тому +1

    I'm not sure which is more appealing - her intelligence or those beautiful eyes. Probably both.

  • @GEOFERET
    @GEOFERET 10 місяців тому +1

    Very interesting video indeed. You know what should come next. The place (or places) with the best weather on Earth. I think most viewers are contemplating that right now. Very good job everyone.

  • @nikmohamed5906
    @nikmohamed5906 11 місяців тому +1

    When I climbed the Mt Washington, New Hampshire in USA few years ago.... The weather fluctuation was EXTREME and changes by the minute. No kidding I thought I almost died with the temperature fluctuation and Horizontal Wind hurricane level force that literally blow me off my feet. And black ice literally everywhere on the slope. I ended up had to flag down a passing vehicle to climb down the mountain because my knees literally gave out after falling down like a dozen time.

  • @davidkuhns8389
    @davidkuhns8389 11 місяців тому +11

    In my library I have an account of a winter climb on Denali, titled "Minus 148" from the windchill encountered by the climbers. That was not an official measurement, so I guess it can't count as a record, but I am sure the mountains of Alaska or the Himalayas experience conditions worse than Mt. Washington but aren't home to weather stations to record what happens.

  • @cuddlepaws4423
    @cuddlepaws4423 11 місяців тому +1

    My Husband says Maiya May is REALLY Yummy , as well as knowing what she is on about . Beautiful AND brainy . He even watched the advert at the end ! and said he would even watch her her doing a Party Political Broadcast 💘💘 Aren't men easily pleased ? Hugs from the UK .

  • @Halli50
    @Halli50 11 місяців тому +1

    How about doing a video about the most survivable places once the climate change effects REALLY start to bite? Places where temperatures rarely or never reach extremes and where precipitation rarely causes serious flooding, yet ensures enough water for human consumption and irrigation, not to mention extras like hydroelectric power generation.

  • @Rjsjrjsjrjsj
    @Rjsjrjsjrjsj 11 місяців тому +1

    Yes. I could survive in any of those places, given the proper equipment. So could you. 😉

  • @Beanedict_C
    @Beanedict_C 11 місяців тому +1

    I’ve gotta work Nebula into what is currently my Patreon budget. Half my subscription feed is on Nebula already and I definitely want to support projects like this!

  • @Thessalin
    @Thessalin 11 місяців тому +3

    Augh! The thumbnail has the giant red circle over me! Aaarreggghhhhhh run! Escape from Atlanta!!
    🏃🚴🤸🤽🏊🚣🚄🚙🛶⛵️✈️🛸

  • @kemsat-n6h
    @kemsat-n6h 11 місяців тому +3

    I think the place with the worst weather would have to score pretty well in all the categories you mentioned. A place where it’s dry but also gets a lot of rain, and gets really hot & really cold, and is also really windy. The confluence of all those things is what I would say is the worst weather.

  • @vesawuoristo4162
    @vesawuoristo4162 11 місяців тому +6

    We were driving up the auto road on Mount Washington years ago , it is fairly hair-raising ride. My family was freaking out so much I had to turn around , which is a thing in itself. This was in the summer.

  • @MylesLocken
    @MylesLocken 11 місяців тому +1

    Saudi Arabia has the record for being te hottest place on earth. It hit 36°C, 82°C with the humidity.

  • @prettypic444
    @prettypic444 11 місяців тому +1

    I was in palms springs last summer when they came close to breaking the death valley record again (its much cheaper to go during the summer, and we were already booked. Even that far away, it was BOILING

  • @KJ-vc3sw
    @KJ-vc3sw 11 місяців тому +2

    Love this series. Thank you.

  • @mortshare7037
    @mortshare7037 11 місяців тому +1

    I’d bet the top of Denali puts Mt. Washington to shame.

  • @shaynewhite1
    @shaynewhite1 11 місяців тому +3

    I read somewhere once that the Khasi Hills and the surrounding area, while considered the wettest place on Earth, actually don't receive rainfall year round - mainly during Monsoon season, and thus still experience droughts and lack of water at other times of the year!

    • @icanintospace
      @icanintospace 11 місяців тому

      That is true. While the rainfall is unending during the monsoon, the months of October to February is very cold, dry and sometimes the locals do have troubles with water. These days it's not a big deal since rainwater harvesting and water planning is in place, it was once a big problem. But this just tells you how extreme the rain is. The 1042" of rain that you see is dumped over a period of about 4-6 months. This does however create a very unique, lush and ecologically megadiverse tropical and subtropical rainforest.

  • @ecurewitz
    @ecurewitz 11 місяців тому +1

    Been to mount Washington long ago. Never going back

  • @davidargiro8306
    @davidargiro8306 11 місяців тому +1

    I guessed Mt Washington for the wind, so I guess it was sorta correct, lol. I recall the weatherman that was on duty at that location was interviewed by one of the national news channels earlier this year.

  • @johnkarjalainen8003
    @johnkarjalainen8003 11 місяців тому +1

    "Maiya May is making our day, shines upon humanity like a sunray!
    We listen to May and it is easy to hear, now we wanna be informed,
    research and cooperate with the Biosphere!
    Maiya, a woman setting the seeds for change, understanding planet Earth does not seem anymore out of range!
    Floods to come, water will rise, so will women to lead humans into new civilisation,
    good news in all the wet, this timeline is unavoidable realization!"

  • @MrNeji1373
    @MrNeji1373 11 місяців тому +2

    Could you arrive in the 21st century and use the system metric !! thank you :)

    • @lynnhettrick7588
      @lynnhettrick7588 11 місяців тому +1

      That would be great! 👍🏼

    • @awelch31
      @awelch31 11 місяців тому

      It’s not a big deal. America is never changing its system. Stop asking

    • @lynnhettrick7588
      @lynnhettrick7588 11 місяців тому

      Jimmy Carter tried. He was getting ready for the 21st century, but then Reagan dismantled all of it and reversed policies.

  • @Margoth195
    @Margoth195 11 місяців тому +1

    5:37 "Oh Wellington is wonderful! we love the Wind the rain and the Phoenix!!!" Man i miss welly

  • @hagvaktok
    @hagvaktok 11 місяців тому +1

    Mount Washingtons massive winds and wetness means that Tuckermans Ravine, a big cirque below the summit, is guarranteed huge snow accumulations and excellent late spring skiing [no lifts though - you have to hike up].

  • @ulfhof3254
    @ulfhof3254 11 місяців тому +1

    What a beautiful woman. Wow.

  • @roginutah
    @roginutah 11 місяців тому +1

    Cold causes higher mortality than heat. About ~8-10 times. Cherrapunjee doesn't "lie in the path of" so much as it was built "in the path of" all that rain. Fun video, though.

  • @all3ykat79
    @all3ykat79 11 місяців тому +1

    WELLINGTON!!! We possibly have the fastest burn time too... when that cold air rushes in from the south it does NOT bring cloud cover. So it burns in just a few minutes. It is also sucking up heaps of moisture from the sea as it does, so at night, when the air cools back down, it brings the northern clouds with it.

  • @rubicunduseratiudas1264
    @rubicunduseratiudas1264 10 місяців тому

    It's not the "Addacama" desert. It's the ATACAMA DESERT. Pronounce the T as you would in the word "ATTENTION" instead of pronouncing it as a Spanish R like Americans do in the word "pretty".

  • @MrSameerMalik1
    @MrSameerMalik1 11 місяців тому +1

    STILL WAITING FOR THAT WEATHERED CAP lol

  • @grindupBaker
    @grindupBaker 11 місяців тому

    Mountain at ocean precipitation effect, my thumbnail I'm standing August 12, 2008 at 900 feet above the World's Record Snow Fall looking down at the ski resort place (95 feet deep snow pack 1998/9). In 2011 there was snow pack 62 feet deep in July exactly where I'm standing so the ploughed bit ended 4 km back (900 feet down).

  • @warrentreadwelljr.treadwel2694
    @warrentreadwelljr.treadwel2694 11 місяців тому

    Well, Pacific-bred hurricanes almost never hit Death Valley. But it did recently. Flooding , horrific flooding. Think Oman, 2023, October.

  • @apexchaser6187
    @apexchaser6187 11 місяців тому +1

    Question whether or not this is a sponsor you want to work with. The first carbon calculator released to the public was done so by BP, as a way to deflect from the fact that broader public policy on large industrial polluters is the only true way to accomplish anything meaningful with regards to climate change.

  • @christupper0
    @christupper0 11 місяців тому +1

    In northern Maine we have about 150 days with snow on the ground. You definitely gotta love it to live it ⛄️

  • @isaaclogan6185
    @isaaclogan6185 11 місяців тому +1

    I think Florida has the worst weather, we get hurricanes almost every year, tons of rain, severe thunderstorms, tornado outbreaks and we just had one today, sometimes snow if just right, and it’s super duper hot and humid creating a wet bulb effect which is more dangerous than heat or cold but just my opinion

    • @crandonborth
      @crandonborth 11 місяців тому

      Except it never gets cold and you don't have to put 3 layer of cloths on just to start you car so it can warm up before you go to work. Once you experience a Northern Winter you will realize how tame Florida weather truly is.

    • @isaaclogan6185
      @isaaclogan6185 11 місяців тому +1

      @@crandonborth have you been in a 185mph hurricane cuz I have and I can tell you right now a “northern winter” is nothing compared to hurricanes like Ian, idalia, Irma, Charley, Ivan, Michael, Wilma, Florence, Andrew, Dorian, Mathew and all the historical hurricanes of Florida’s past and also people don’t die of cold as much as people do in 100 degree weather with 80 percent humidity so I can disagree with your statement

    • @crandonborth
      @crandonborth 11 місяців тому

      Have you ever experienced a -60 windchill?? That is the type of cold that will give you instant frostbite to any exposed skin almost immediately and yes you do realize that in fact we do have 100 Degree temps up here and 90% humidity as well. We don't get hurricanes obviously but we super high heat and super cold winters. We dont have much for Spring and Fall just a few weeks then bam its snowing. @@isaaclogan6185

  • @andreimihaesi
    @andreimihaesi 11 місяців тому

    The islands in the far southern ocean, like south Georgia, Macquarie Island, Bouvet and so on have insanely strong CONSTANT winds, its always wet and cold but rarely get proper snow, extreme waves... just wild.

  • @readjordan2257
    @readjordan2257 11 місяців тому

    4:05 umm..but those places have perfect humidity, so the water cant evaporate because the air is already completely saturated. Even supersaturated as conditions change to allow a "higher 100%" just like an IQ of 100 in Singapore is similar to an IQ of 130+ in South Georgia, USA. Or 110ish for the global average.
    So no the heat goes to making everything and everyone else hot. You can tell this because spraying water in a desert will cool you off, make it feel 5-20 degrees cooler for a few minutes, but in the Okefenokee or Everglades, spraying water is just going to make it "hotter" and more suffocating.

  • @mrbeansification
    @mrbeansification Місяць тому

    Would have loved to see the May 3rd 99 tornado on here, clocked in at 302 MPH. Also, doesnt south dakota hold the record for the largest 24 hour temperature swing at over a 105F/40C swing in a single day at one location?

  • @billwhite1603
    @billwhite1603 9 місяців тому

    Your lead in is misleading. A co-author of now infamous book and leading climatologist says the data does not back up the weather being worse, better, or different than previously. Using today's dollars is disingenuous and imprinting propaganda for many reasons but mostly just in US most places damaged had no structures in the past. What would be the cost if the 1928 Miami hurricane hit today? It's still the most powerful storm to hit Florida from 1928. Not so many cars or farting cows back then. Hey, but you are hot looking so I'm sure that has given you passes in the past on the lack or mix of truth or accuracy.

  • @DelpEvin33
    @DelpEvin33 11 місяців тому

    The Atacama Desert (the driest in the world) is a cold-arid (Bwk) type desert like the Gobi Desert of China and Mongolia; and contrary to hot-arid type deserts (Bwh) such as the coastal desert of Peru, the desert of northwest Argentina, the Sahara desert or the Sonoran desert. The average maximum temperatures of the Atacama Desert range between 20° to 27° and the minimum temperatures between -1° to 8° (Weatherspark) it even snows in the interior valleys of the desert.

  • @caatabatic
    @caatabatic 11 місяців тому +2

    what about a wet bulb place, that sounds slightly more terrible and dangerous.

  • @christiancook3118
    @christiancook3118 10 місяців тому

    When Mt. Washington hit -108, the entire state of New Hampshire was in an EXTREME cold spell. I think we hit around -15 or -20 in coastal New Hampshire. I wasnt surprised at all when i saw the record on the Mountain. Then 3 months later we were at the top of the mountain in 60 degree sunny weather. Love my home state.

  • @JR-gh8lp
    @JR-gh8lp 11 місяців тому +1

    New Hampshire?

  • @BillionairesArentYourFriends
    @BillionairesArentYourFriends 10 місяців тому

    Does anyone think we 'missed' anywhere? I oddly don't think so, but it's an interesting debate.
    I think most of the world, even the poorest or least inhabitanted, can/do currently report their own weather, (as well as other countries can gather data via satellites) so I don't see a possibility in the near future of a missed-location. Only non-recorded data from the relatively far past.
    Does anyone else think Mt. Washington will probably always be top of her game? Or why not?
    My theory:
    People in places of higher power/govement officials want to know if they're going to get rained on as much as anyone else, you can bet they'll invest in the county's tech to do so. Not a single govement/country is free of some type of corruption, so all countries will inevitably get those people what they want. But that means we all get weather data too. Probably. I don't know. I'm a random person in a UA-cam comment.

  • @pluspiping
    @pluspiping 10 місяців тому

    It feels especially ominous to me, that a mountain as old as Mt. Washington is home to this extreme and brutal weather. The Appalachians (which the White Mountains are a part of) already gave me a weird feeling - they're older than animals with bones, they were once contiguous with the Scottish Highlands & Norway... and now one of them is an ice-hurricane nightmare peak.
    .....That's metal as hell.

  • @picklesdill5462
    @picklesdill5462 11 місяців тому +2

    0:39 lol poor guy

  • @dhawthorne1634
    @dhawthorne1634 11 місяців тому

    I would like to experience a Mount Washington winter, but only for about a minute. Then I'd be happy to NEVER do it again.

  • @prawnstar9213
    @prawnstar9213 4 місяці тому

    Imagine getting your sports pilots license there. HA! You likely couldn’t because it would be too windy to fly 90% of the time.

  • @pauls5745
    @pauls5745 11 місяців тому

    Ok the coldest place on Earth is Antarctica. How cold is it? PBS: The katabatic winds here reach 150 mph!

  • @TheHonestPeanut
    @TheHonestPeanut 11 місяців тому

    No one can reduce their carbon footprint to zero? We don't have to. We just have to fundamentally change the operations of industrial society and commerce. Easy peasy.

  • @stevencooke6451
    @stevencooke6451 2 місяці тому

    The one time we visited Mt. Washington it was actually quite pleasant. Mostly sunny, pleasant temps and the winds were moderate. It was in August so I suppose chances were better for a habitable day.

  • @repbacchista
    @repbacchista 11 місяців тому

    SURPRISE! America gave itself some world title again hahahahahaha even if its the worst something, can't allow China get this one!

  • @RareGenXer
    @RareGenXer 11 місяців тому

    I would say the northern Great Lakes are a close second; Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan specifically.

  • @gabrielrockman
    @gabrielrockman 11 місяців тому

    Is the decreased level of oxygen in the air at higher altitudes considered part of the weather or not?
    I think that the places where plants literally cannot grow due to altitude, or the angle of the sun (in the arctic and antarctic) are the places with the worst weather. If plant life is capable of living there, it's not the worst weather.
    I'd likely pick the McMurdo Dry Valleys in Antarctica, or the summit of K2 as the worst weather in the world.

  • @MeesterJ
    @MeesterJ 11 місяців тому

    The Dry Valleys in Antarctica are supposed to be completely devoid of precipitation for millions of years, making them drier than the Atacama

  • @thomaswwwiegand
    @thomaswwwiegand 11 місяців тому

    Comparing is easy : just put a person in that place and count how long can survive. The fastest death is winner.
    But that is another just fu... how has the longest competition.
    Better would be to understand what of this similar conditions will be faced as of climate change at now populated places and force people to live.
    And so you forget to add flooded areas, what means dead after at least 10 minutes ... and as of this just a hello to Florida !

  • @stefanschleps8758
    @stefanschleps8758 10 місяців тому

    If I could I would build my home in the top of Mt. Washington. Perfect!

  • @whatever_6785
    @whatever_6785 10 місяців тому

    Some places that I think are worth mentioning is my whole country which is the Philippines. The number of typhoons hitting us every year is just absurd compared to other countries. I've become so used to it that I become unfazed whenever I hear a typhoon forming. It is so common that in certain months, typhoons literally bombard us one after another without rest like it's not even a week when the last typhoon hit and there's another one coming straight toward us like wtf, at least give us some time to recover.

  • @mujtabarashid3847
    @mujtabarashid3847 11 місяців тому

    Iraq is hotter than Death Valley. Also death valley is pretty much uninhabited whilst all the areas in Iraq that exceed over 55 celsius have millions of people living there.

  • @mahmutyilmaz6387
    @mahmutyilmaz6387 11 місяців тому

    Wouldn't it just be win-win situation, if death valley was simply flooded? Just dig a nice and big tunnel to rhe the sea.

  • @TDPhinsTalkAdmin
    @TDPhinsTalkAdmin 10 місяців тому

    That’s cool and all, but it’s definitely Relámpago del Catatumbo

  • @Chris-ut6eq
    @Chris-ut6eq 20 днів тому

    @1:35 saying this river wash area was untouched by rain for centuries. Guess it was untouched by wind to have a centuries old water flow so clearly marked in the soil.

  • @JohnDegen_aka_Jeehannes
    @JohnDegen_aka_Jeehannes 11 місяців тому

    Very interesting, very well presented, but imperial measurements all the way on PBS? Mmmm